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The Riverbend Festival, also called Riverbend, is a well-known annual music festival in Chattanooga, Tennessee, which was started in June 1982 as a five-night festival. Over the years, the festival devolved into the three nights of its current run and presently ranks in the top 10 percent of all American festivals. [ 1 ]
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Demolished in 1973. Not to be confused with Chattanooga Terminal Station: 2: East Side Junior High School: March 6, 1987 (#87000392) April 21, 2003: 2200 E. Main Street: Chattanooga: Demolished, now Eastside Elementary School 3: Richard Hardy Junior High School: September 15, 1980 (#80003812) July 13, 2006: 2115 Dodson Avenue: Chattanooga
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St. Elmo became part of the city of Chattanooga when it was annexed in September 1929. Hundreds of properties in the neighborhood were listed on the National Register in 1982, and in 1996 St. Elmo was designated a Local Historic District. Many of the buildings from the late 19th and early 20th century have been preserved.
Feb. 17—Prime riverfront property in downtown Chattanooga is at the center of concerns that its possible development could hurt events such as the Head of the Hooch, Riverbend Festival and ...
Chattacon was founded by Chattanooga native Irv Koch; [4] the first Chattacon was held in January 1976. [5] Formatted as a "relaxacon", it drew 81 guests, and lost money. By Chattacon III in 1978, it was a more traditional science fiction convention, with A. E. van Vogt as Guest of Honor, and had returned the costs of its original organization ...
The Soldiers and Sailors Memorial Auditorium is a historic performance hall in Chattanooga, Tennessee.Built between 1922 and 1924 by John Parks (John Parks Company, General Contractors) at a cost of $700,000 and designed by noted architect R. H. Hunt, who also designed Chattanooga's lavish Tivoli Theatre, the theater honors area veterans of World War I.